Tanya dismissed her women curtly. This conversation was not going to be food for the gossip mills. And once they were alone, she waited to see what face Alicia would show this time. If it was to be the friendly, helpful one again, Tanya would probably get nauseous.

But Alicia was more her true self this time, if her smug little smile and first volley were any indication. "Do you know where Stefan spent last night?"

Tanya had a moment's doubt, which she swiftly squashed. She decided to play the game Alicia's way and smiled back with some smugness of her own.

"Indeed I do."

That Alicia didn't call her a liar or come right out and state that Stefan had been with her told Tanya that her moment of doubt had been for nothing. Alicia had no idea where Stefan had spent the night, but it certainly hadn't been with her.

"If all you wanted was to cause trouble, Alicia, you can leave right now."

Angry now that her first tactic hadn't worked, the redhead tried another. "That isn't why— I had to come before it's too late. If you cry off, refuse to marry Stefan, you'll give him the excuse he needs to get out of this marriage without shirking his duty. He doesn't want to marry you. Don't you have any pride?"

"More than is good for me, I don't doubt. But I happen to know—"

Tanya broke off when she caught sight of Alicia's ruby necklace. It was almost like— no, it was exactly like the one Latzko had dangled from his finger to show her what had paid for her demise. And here was a copy of it, or more to the point, Latzko's necklace had been a copy of this one.

A furious rage rose up to nearly choke Tanya, because there wasn't the slightest doubt in her mind that the person who had tried to have her killed, not just once, but twice, was standing before her. Yet none of that rage showed. She merely reached slowly for her knife, then recalled that it wasn't on her thigh because she hadn't wanted to shock all those women who were dressing her from head to toe this morning. So she got up and walked casually to her bureau, opened the drawer, took out her knife, and palmed it.

She then turned toward Alicia, offered a tight little smile as she approached her, and continued where she'd left off. "I happen to know you are utterly deluding yourself if you think any of what you said is true anymore. It might have been true before Stefan left for America, but his outlook has definitely changed. He happens to love me, Alicia, just as I love him. But I'll wager you've already guessed that." Close enough now, Tanya shoved the redhead up against the wall and set the knife at her throat. "Isn't that why you tried to have me killed?"

Alicia blanched as white as Tanya's gown, her blue eyes circles of horror as she felt her skin break under the sharp blade. "Don't... please!"

"Give me one good reason why I shouldn't," Tanya hissed ominously.

"I was out of my mind with anger because he told me we were finished, completely finished. I had given him two years, waiting for him to become king, but when it happens, he discards me. Yes, I had guessed he had fallen in love with you. It was him I wanted to hurt through you. But after I had calmed down and thought about it, I was horrified at what I had done. I swear to God, I'm not a murderess. I was just so angry — Tatiana, if I had truly, seriously wanted to assure your death, I would have used the real rubies."

That explanation was likely true, but it didn't incline Tanya to be forgiving. "Do you think that will matter to Stefan when he hears about it?"

Whatever color had been coming back into Alicia's cheeks because Tanya was at least listening to her, blanched right back out now. "Oh, God, please don't tell him. Even though you still live, he'll have me executed. He'll have to. Any threat against the royal house is considered treasonous, and he'll see it in no other way."

"I wouldn't worry about him just yet, when I haven't decided whether or not I'm going to cut your throat," Tanya said, pressing the knife in just enough to make her point.

Alicia's eyes flared wide again. "I swear, Tatiana, on my life, I'll never do anything so foolish again. I'll leave the country, I'll—"

"I get the idea, for crying out loud!" Tanya snapped impatiently. "I'll accept your word for now, though God knows why I should be that foolish. But I'm also going to leave a message with Maximilian Daneff — that if another attempt is made on my life, he won't have to look any further than you for the ultimate responsibility. Now get out, Alicia. And see that you do leave the country."

After the door closed behind Alicia, Tanya shook her head, wondering if that wasn't the most foolish thing she'd ever done, letting that woman go with no more than a thin scratch on her neck to pay for all the trouble, fear, and worry she'd caused. And what was she going to tell Maximilian's security people, who were even now out searching for her would-be assassin? Was she just going to let them go on wasting their—

"You are very good at dealing with your enemies, Janacek — except for the ones you don't know about. Perhaps I will let you write that little message for Daneff before I kill you. It will be amusing to see someone else pay for my deeds."

Tanya had whirled around at his first word, finding him standing in the doorway to her sitting room, where she had been having her lessons all week. And included in the lessons on her own ancestry had been miniature portraits of Janos Stamboloff and several members of his family. She knew she was looking at one of those people right now. Stefan had been so right. Swarthy-skinned, with blond hair and blue eyes, the man was a younger replica of

Janos himself. And he held a gun pointing right at her chest.

"Ivan Stamboloff?" she guessed.

"Very clever, Princess." He gave her a mockery of a formal bow.

"How did you survive that shipwreck?"

He smiled beautifully. He was actually a handsome man. There certainly wasn't anything sinister-looking about him to warn that he was a coldblooded killer. Perhaps that was why her heart hadn't jumped into her throat yet.

"I'm a good swimmer," was his cocky answer to her question.

"You swam across a whole sea?"

"I swam away from the wreck. Death awaited me there, not rescue. Leaving the area was my only chance."

"But that was suicide!"

He shrugged at her amazement. "It was my salvation, as it turned out. I was found the next day — a miracle, surely, that a Turkish ship should sail so close by to see me and take me aboard. A miracle, because it was God's will that I finish what my grandfather swore would be done."

Did he really believe that? And even with his having stated it clearly, that he was going to kill her, his expression didn't change. If he was harboring a deep, abiding hatred for her, it didn't show.

"If you shoot me," she pointed out reasonably, "my guards will be in here instantly. You wouldn't have a chance of escaping. You'll die, too."

"I would prefer not to, but I am prepared to die if I must. Now come away from that door, Princess. "

She moved slowly away from it, but only because he was walking slowly toward it. She realized too late that he was probably going to lock it, bettering his own chances for escape afterward.

She tried distracting him. "How did you get in here, anyway?"

"The window in there." He nodded toward the sitting room. "I thought dawn the perfect time, so imagine my dilemma when your damn women showed up that early. I barely had time to dash behind the drapes."

"You climbed up two stories?"

"I came down from the roof. It was much easier. "

And he was dressed in the lightest gray, the same color as the stones of the palace. It would have been very hard for anyone to notice him outside dangling from the roof.

"So you've been hiding in there all morning?"

"I am nothing if not patient, Princess. Haven't I waited twenty years for you to show yourself again?"

She wished this seemed more real to her, that she felt even half the fear she'd felt the last time she was in danger, to keep her from saying things like, "That doesn't sound like patience, it sounds like fanaticism."

Her remark didn't annoy him, however. He actually chuckled as he reached for the door.

"Touch that lock and I'll scream," she snapped.

He hesitated, even lowering his hand. "That wouldn't be wise of you, Princess."

She shrugged. "You're going to kill me anyway. Why shouldn't I take you with me?"

"Perhaps you would like to try talking me out of killing you first, as your little friend just did with you. I wouldn't mind hearing you plead a little."

"I don't think you'll hear that. But you have a knife," she said, looking at the dagger stuck beneath his belt, and knowing full well that that was what he meant to kill her with if he could, to keep the noise down to a minimum. "And I have a knife. Dare you try this fairly?"

He laughed. "You want to fight with me? You think just because you surprised me with your knife once, you're any good at wielding it?"

Her eyes flared the slightest bit as she heard what he was admitting. "So it was you that night in Danzig?"

"Of course it was. I had been waiting there for months for Barany to return with you."

"But how did you even know to expect me?"

"Because they thought I was dead, which I knew would bring you out of hiding at last. I couldn't have planned that shipwreck better if I had thought of it myself."

"Well, you haven't asked me to put down my knife, not that I would. So are you willing to break with tradition and do this fairly?"